joy, August 12, 1977 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page tieven P, +nv . _uut1,17 H iHGNDIYPg ise Arroyo fights hard luck tag By PAUL CAMPBELL Special To The Daily p)ETROIT - It took Fernando :ayo seven years of proving asef in the minors before he his chance with the Detroit ers. If there is one quality 1970 tenth round draft pick developed, it's patience. BUT ARROYO is having to :1 on every ounce of that pa- lace to deal with the disap- tinting realities of his first full tleague season. it hasn't been disappointing ecause of an injury, a la Fid- ch. Arroyo has been depend- y healthy all summer. Nor :s it been disappointing be- !se he didn't live up to ex- lations, a la Roberts and hie. Arroyo has done more an anyone but himself ex- eted. What has made 1977 tough to allow for the friendly 25-year- righty from Sacramento, hfornia, is his 6-11 won-loss ard. He's pitched well enough have those numbers reversed, It has suffered from a dearth support-on the field and at e plate - from the regulars at play behind him. "This isn't as much fun as thought it would be," Arroyo aid before a recent game at iger Stadium. "After all the ears in the minors and in lexico, making the team in he spring was a great boost." Arroyo started in the bullpen, °nce he had made a dozen earances in his only other stint with the parent club late in the 1975 season. But manager Ralph Honk was impressed by Arroyo's control and decided to give him a chance to start. "Fernando was our most con- sistent long reliever in April and May," Houk recalled. "He'd also started a couple of times last time he was up, and we needed fresh arms." THINGS WENT well. On June 15, Arroyo pitched his first ma- jor league shutout, a 9-0 five- hit conquest of Toronto. It raised his record to 5-3 and low- ered his ERA to 2.83, tenth in the AL. Not bad for a man who at one time was forced to won- der if the Tigers had any plans for him. "I was surprised when I was sent back to Evansville last year," said Arroyo. "I had pitched really well in the Mexi- can Pacific League during the winter, hut I don't think they (the 'Tigers) even knew I was pitching." Life at the top quickly became a little less pleasant, however. In his next start, Arroyo was sailing along until the fifth in- ning against Cleveland. Then two close plays at the plate went against him. Before he knew it, "It gets frustrating sometimes. I feel like I'm doing my job but not getting anything for it." -Fernando A rroyo the Indians had scored four times on only two hits. Arroyo was yanked by Houk. His next start was also against Cleveland. A r r o y o gave up only five hits in a complete game e f to r t. His teammates, however, c o u 1 d score only twice. Result-a 4-2 loss. Things got worse. In his next eight starts, Arroyo was vic- timized by costly errors, close p 1 a y s, and teammates that scored an average of 2.3 runs per game behind him. When it was over, his record had dipped to 5-9. His ERA had risen, but by less than hilf a point. ARROYO FNINLLY broke the jinx in C'hicaguon ,uly 27 with a fine one-ritn effort. But he has los: twice sitce then, and the 4-1 defeat that Texas pinned him with lst Saturday followed the bad luck pittern. All four runs were untearned. "I try not to think about it,' Arroyo said of his troubles in creasing the W portion of his record. "But I need some luck. "Hey, I know that I'm not a great pitcher. I don't over- power batters, but I keep the ball down and get them to hit it into the ground. I think I've become a good major league starter." Arroyo hopes to salvage at least a .500 year and expects that his luck will change. He's signed through 1978, and says that he's happy in Detroit. ' "I'm just biding my time," Arroyo said. "I'm part of a good young team and I plan to stay here." NIGHT EDITOR: DONALD MacLACHLAN A's BO RANKS SECOND: Paterno: Winningest coach I R M I N G H A M, Ala. - Joe Paterno of Penn ate continues to lead in win- ig percentage and Paul Bry- t of Alabama still tops the ai victories list among all live college football coaches. P A T E R N O, SINCE ting over the Nittany Lions seasons ago, has an .812 per- rtage on a 101-23-1 record. lant, who also served as ad coach at Maryland, Ken- ky' and Texas A&M prior taking over at Alabama in 8, has 262 victories. The records were compiled Scoop Hudgins of the South- i Conference office. tO SCHEMBECHLER of Ohigan has regained second ace on the percentage list ir Arizona State's Frank sh. Michigan's 10-2. mark in i raised Schembechler's ov- all mark to 116-28-6 for .793, lie ASU's 4-7 dropped Coach thu's record to 155-46-1 for 1, The Sun Devils' 12-0 aik in 1975 had pushed Kush t Schembechler. Second on the total victories Top 10 coaches Yrs. W L T Pet. 0 Paterno hon State 11 101 23 1 .812 SCHEMBEcHLER co G.5.s 16 28 6 .703 k Kush + :z. state 18 155 46 1 .770 "(!Y Hayes state 31 2a es s .705 rHByant Alams 312012 75 10 .705 Devine tlre Dame 18 136 47 8 .733 en Cozza te 11 77 33 1 .718 Salloy °irailo 0 61 25 0, .709 hie McClndon tDooley rha 13098433.0GP tabulation behind Bryant is Ohio State's Woody Hayes with 222. Hayes is fourth in percen- tage with a .7652 record and Bryant is fifth at .7649. T H E RETIREMENTS of Dairell Royal of Texas, Frank Broyles of Arkansas and Jim Parker of Clemons pushed three new ,coaches into the Top Twenty list. Bill Mallory of Colorado State jumped to eighth with a .709 mark and Joe Yukica of Boston College joined the Top Twenty in the 18th spot with a .62i percentage. The appearance of Bill Doo- ley of Mississippi State in the Too 20 marks the first time in 20 years it has been compiled that brothers were listed. Vince Dooley of Georgia is 10th with a .688 record and Bill is 20th at .549. 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